Author Topic: US Economy, the stock market , and other investment/savings strategies  (Read 483013 times)

Crafty_Dog

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Wesbury: 3Q Productivity
« Reply #1200 on: December 07, 2016, 01:39:36 PM »
Nonfarm Productivity Increased at a 3.1% Annual Rate in the Third Quarter To view this article, Click Here
Brian S. Wesbury, Chief Economist
Robert Stein, Deputy Chief Economist
Date: 12/6/2016

Nonfarm productivity (output per hour) increased at a 3.1% annual rate in the third quarter, unchanged from last month's preliminary report. Nonfarm productivity is unchanged versus last year.

Real (inflation-adjusted) compensation per hour in the nonfarm sector increased at a 2.2% annual rate in Q3 and is up 1.8% versus last year. Unit labor costs rose at a 0.7% annual rate in Q3 and are up 3.0% versus a year ago.

In the manufacturing sector, productivity rose at a 0.4% annual rate in Q3, slower than among nonfarm businesses as a whole. The smaller gain in manufacturing productivity was due to slower growth in output. Real compensation per hour increased at a 2.0% annual rate in the manufacturing sector, while unit labor costs rose at a 3.3% annual rate.

Implications: Nonfarm productivity growth was unrevised at a 3.1% annual rate in the third quarter. That may seem odd given the upward revisions to real GDP growth for Q3, but the number of hours worked were revised up as well, leaving output growth per hour unchanged. Still, that 3.1% annualized gain in productivity for the third quarter represents the fastest gain in two years, a break from the trend in declining productivity readings over the prior three quarters, and a clear improvement from the 2% annualized pace of productivity growth seen over the past twenty years. But despite the healthy rise in Q3, productivity remains unchanged from a year ago. We believe government statistics underestimate actual productivity growth. Have you ever had to call a cab or a limo to come pick you up on short notice? Now, with the press of a button, UBER sends a car directly to your door. And it's faster, easier, and often cheaper than ever before. Meanwhile Yelp gives you instant restaurant reviews and Facetime lets you talk face-to-face with people thousands of miles away. The benefits from these technologies have been immense. But because many of these incredible new technologies are free, they aren't directly included in output measures, making their impact on productivity difficult to measure. So while our quality of life continues to rise, it's not completely showing up in the government statistics. As the tax and regulatory environment improves, expect productivity growth to pick up in the next couple of years. In particular, a lower tax rate on corporate America will encourage greater efficiency. In addition, continued employment gains are pushing down the unemployment rate and putting rising pressure on wages, which give companies a greater incentive to take advantage of the efficiency-enhancing technology that entrepreneurs have been inventing in troves.
 

Crafty_Dog

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Re: US Economics, the stock market , and other investment/savings strategies
« Reply #1201 on: December 22, 2016, 10:30:40 AM »
Real GDP Growth in Q3 was Revised to a 3.5% Annual Rate To view this article, Click Here
Brian S. Wesbury, Chief Economist
Robert Stein, Deputy Chief Economist
Date: 12/22/2016

Real GDP growth in Q3 was revised to a 3.5% annual rate from a prior estimate of 3.2%, beating the consensus expected 3.3%.

The upward revision was due to stronger business investment and personal consumption. Other categories were either unchanged or changed only slightly.

The largest positive contribution to the real GDP growth rate in Q3 came from consumer spending. The weakest component of real GDP was residential investment.

The GDP price index was unrevised at a 1.4% annualized rate of change. Nominal GDP growth – real GDP plus inflation – was revised up to a 5.0% annual rate versus a prior estimate of 4.6%. Nominal GDP is up 2.9% versus a year ago and up at a 3.1% annual rate in the past two years.

Implications: Today's final GDP report for the third quarter showed real economic growth at a 3.5% annual rate, slightly better than consensus expectations, and the fastest growth in two years. The upward revisions were due to business investment and personal consumption, which means the "mix" of growth was favorable for the year ahead. Although corporate profits were revised down slightly, they were still up 5.8% in Q3 and up 2.1% from a year ago. The lull in profits over the past year and a half has been an energy story. But as energy prices are well off their lows from earlier this year, we expect higher profits in the quarters to come. Meanwhile, plugging the new profits data into our capitalized profits model suggests US equities remain cheap, not only at today's interest rates but even using a 10-year Treasury yield in the 3.5% - 4% range. In terms of monetary policy, the Fed should see today's report as a confirmation that they made the right decision to raise short-term rates last week. Nominal GDP growth (real growth plus inflation) was revised to 5% annual rate in Q3 from a prior estimate of 4.6%. Nominal GDP is up 2.9% in the past year and up at a 3.1% annual rate in the past two years, leaving the Fed plenty of room for rate hikes in 2017. Monetary policy will not be restrictive until the federal funds rate is moved close to nominal GDP growth. That's still a long way off. In other news today, the FHFA index, which measures prices for homes financed with conforming mortgages, increased 0.4% in October. In the past year, these home prices are up 6.2% versus a 6.0% increase in the year ending in October 2015. Look for continued gains in home prices in the year ahead, as jobs keep expanding, wage growth accelerates, and any headwind created by an increase in mortgage rates is offset by expectations of faster future economic growth.


DougMacG

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Re: US Economics, the stock market , and other investment/savings strategies
« Reply #1202 on: December 22, 2016, 02:41:30 PM »
"Real GDP growth in Q3 was revised to a 3.5% annual rate from a prior estimate of 3.2%, beating the consensus expected 3.3%."

I must admit I was wrong when I predicted the growth estimate would be revised downward after the election.  Still, this and the current quarter will conclude 8 years of lethargic, pathetic and ARTIFICIAL growth.

Nominal growth is 3% and our inflation target is 2%.  The difference is a rounding error; we aren't better off.

What would the real growth rate be without 10 trillion in new fiscal deficit stimulative spending?  What would it be without quantitative easing, asset re-purchases and 8 years of near zero interest rate policy?  Zero growth or worse, I suspect.

Easy money when it shouldn't be was a major cause of the last financial meltdown:  https://economicsone.com/2016/12/09/unconventional-monetary-policy-normalization-and-reform/
Have we learned anything?

What would the growth rate be if we didn't tax corporations at the highest rate in the world?  If we didn't pour two dozen new tax increases on the economy with Obamacare, or if we didn't add tens of thousands of new pages of regulations onto what used to be a relatively free economy?  If we hadn't dropped out of the top ten freest countries in the world in the Heritage Freedom Index?

Stay tuned.  Maybe we will find out.

G M

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Re: US Economics, the stock market , and other investment/savings strategies
« Reply #1203 on: December 22, 2016, 06:04:10 PM »
We are hardly out of the woods yet. I am hoping the boom will be soon enough and big enough to start to mitigate the looming collapse.

http://chicagoboyz.net/archives/54412.html

Can Donald Trump Prevent the Economy from Falling Into a Black Hole?

Posted by Kevin Villani on December 13th, 2016 (All posts by Kevin Villani)

Interest rates will eventually rise without an even more devastating policy of financial repression. When they do, rising interest costs will produce a vicious cycle of ever more borrowing. We are already approaching the “event horizon” of spinning into this black hole of an inflationary spiral and economic collapse from which few countries historically have escaped. A substantially higher rate of growth is the only way to break free.

National economic growth is typically measured by the growth of GDP, and citizen well being by the growth of per-capita GDP. The long run trend of GDP growth reflects labor force participation, hours worked and productivity as well as the rate of national saving and the productivity of investments, all of which have been trending down.

The population grows at about 1% annually and actual GDP growth averaged 2% overall for 2010-2016 (using the new World Bank and IMF forecast of US GDP at 1.6% for 2016), hence per capita GDP grew at only 1%. Moreover the income from that 1% growth went primarily to the top one percent while 99% stagnated and minorities fell backwards.

Why we are approaching the Event Horizon
The Obama Administration annually predicted a more historically typical 2.6% per capita growth rate, consistent with the historical growth in non-farm labor productivity. How could their forecasts be so far off?

The Obama Administration pursued the most massive Keynesian fiscal and monetary stimulus ever undertaken. Such a policy generally at least gives the appearance of a rise in well being in the near term, as the government GDP statistic (repetitive, as the word “statistic derives from the Greek word for “state” ) reflects final expenditures, thereby imputing equal value to what governments “spend” as to the discretionary spending of private households and businesses in competitive markets. But labor productivity gains stagnated at only about 1%, most likely reflecting the cost and uncertainty of anti-business regulatory and legislative policies that dampened investment, something the Administration denied, trumping even a short term boost to GDP.

As a result the national debt approximately doubled from $10 trillion to $20 trillion, with contingent liabilities variously estimated from $100 to $200 trillion, putting the economy ever closer to the event horizon. Breaking free will require reversing the highly negative trends by reversing the policies that caused them.

Technology alone isn’t sufficient
Obama Administration apologists argued that stagnation is “the new normal” citing leading productivity experts such as Robert Gordon who dismissed the potential of new technologies. Many disagree, but Gordon’s findings imply even greater reliance on conventional reform.

Fiscal policy won’t be sufficient
Raising taxes may reduce short term deficits but slows growth. Cutting wasteful spending works better but is more difficult.

The list of needed public infrastructure investments has grown since the last one trillion dollar “stimulus” of politically allocated and mostly wasteful pork that contributed to the stagnation of the last eight years. Debt financed public infrastructure investment contributes to growth only if highly productive investments are chosen over political white elephants like California’s bullet train, always problematic.

Major cuts in defense spending are wishful thinking as most geopolitical experts view the world today as a riskier place than at any prior time of the past century, with many parallels to the inter-war period 1919-1939.

The major entitlement programs Social Security and Medicare for the elderly need reform. But for those in or near retirement the potential for savings is slight. Is Medicare really going to be withheld by death squads? Are benefits for those dependent on social security going to be cut significantly, forcing the elderly back into the labor force? Cutting Medicare or SS benefits for those with significant wealth – the equivalent of a wealth tax – won’t affect their consumption, hence offsetting the fall in government deficits with an equal and offsetting liquidation of private wealth. Prospective changes for those 55 years of age or younger should stimulate savings and defer retirement, improving finances only in the long run.

The remaining bureaucracies are in need of major pruning and in numerous cases elimination but they evaded even budget scold David Stockman’s ax during the Reagan Administration.

Americans will have to work more and consume less
That is the typical progressive economic legacy of excessive borrowing from the future.

The first Clinton Administration created the crony capitalist coalition of the political elite and the politically favored, e.g., public sector employees and retirees, subsidy recipients and low income home loan borrowers. The recent Clinton campaign promised to broaden this coalition, which would have accelerated the trip over the event horizon.

Reform that taxes consumption in favor of savings and a return to historical real interest rates could reverse the dramatic decline of the savings rate. Regulations redirecting savings to politically popular housing or environmental causes need to be curtailed in favor of market allocation to productive business investment.

Repeal and replace of Obama Care could reverse the trend to part time employment. Unwinding the approximate doubling of SS Disability payments and temporary unemployment benefits could reverse the decline in labor force participation.

Service sector labor productivity has been falling since 1987, the more politically favored the faster the decline. Legal services are at the bottom, partly reflecting political power of rent-seeking trial lawyers, followed by unionized health and then educational services. Union favoritism through, e.g., Davis Bacon wage requirements and “card check” increases rent seeking, particularly rampant in the unionized public sector.

Competition, of which free but reciprocal trade has historically been a major component, has traditionally provided the largest boost to well being by realizing the benefits of foreign productivity in a lower cost of goods while channeling American labor into employment where their relative productivity is highest. The transition is often painful, but paying people not to work long term is counterproductive. Immigration of both highly skilled and low cost labor (but not dependent family) generally contributes to per capita labor productivity in the same way as free trade.

None of this will be easy. The alternative is Greece without the Mediterranean climate or a sufficiently rich benefactor.

—-

Kevin Villani, chief economist at Freddie Mac from 1982 to 1985, is a principal of University Financial Associates. He has held senior government positions, been affiliated with nine universities, and served as CFO and director of several companies. He recently published Occupy Pennsylvania Avenue on the political origins of the sub-prime lending bubble and aftermath.



"Real GDP growth in Q3 was revised to a 3.5% annual rate from a prior estimate of 3.2%, beating the consensus expected 3.3%."

I must admit I was wrong when I predicted the growth estimate would be revised downward after the election.  Still, this and the current quarter will conclude 8 years of lethargic, pathetic and ARTIFICIAL growth.

Nominal growth is 3% and our inflation target is 2%.  The difference is a rounding error; we aren't better off.

What would the real growth rate be without 10 trillion in new fiscal deficit stimulative spending?  What would it be without quantitative easing, asset re-purchases and 8 years of near zero interest rate policy?  Zero growth or worse, I suspect.

Easy money when it shouldn't be was a major cause of the last financial meltdown:  https://economicsone.com/2016/12/09/unconventional-monetary-policy-normalization-and-reform/
Have we learned anything?

What would the growth rate be if we didn't tax corporations at the highest rate in the world?  If we didn't pour two dozen new tax increases on the economy with Obamacare, or if we didn't add tens of thousands of new pages of regulations onto what used to be a relatively free economy?  If we hadn't dropped out of the top ten freest countries in the world in the Heritage Freedom Index?

Stay tuned.  Maybe we will find out.

ccp

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Re: US Economics, the stock market , and other investment/savings strategies
« Reply #1204 on: January 01, 2017, 08:47:37 AM »
I remember when Peter Gold (?) told us he was buying gold after the tech crash in the early 2000s on a previous forum pre Dog Brothers:

http://www.macrotrends.net/1333/historical-gold-prices-100-year-chart

Crafty_Dog

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December Manufacturing Index
« Reply #1205 on: January 03, 2017, 01:53:48 PM »
The ISM Manufacturing Index Rose to 54.7 in December To view this article, Click Here
Brian S. Wesbury, Chief Economist
Robert Stein, Deputy Chief Economist
Date: 1/3/2017

The ISM manufacturing index rose to 54.7 in December, beating the consensus expected level of 53.8. (Levels higher than 50 signal expansion; levels below 50 signal contraction.)

The major measures of activity were mostly higher in December, and all stand above 50, signaling growth. The new orders index surged to 60.2 from 53.0 in November, while the production index increased to 60.3 from 56.0. The employment index moved higher to 53.1 from 52.3, while the supplier deliveries index declined to 52.9 from 55.7 in November.

The prices paid index increased to 65.5 in December from 54.5 in November.

Implications: Manufacturing ended 2016 on a high note, with the ISM manufacturing survey hitting the highest reading in two years. And December's increase represents the fourth consecutive month that the index has moved higher, signaling faster growth. Both the new orders and production indices hit multi-year highs, suggesting that 2017 should hit the ground running as factories gear up to fill increased demand. Some of this may be in part due to President-Elect Trump's focus on the manufacturing sector, but we think the likelihood of tax and regulatory reform are boosting confidence across industries and will benefit both the manufacturing and service sectors. The employment index also hit a 2016 high in December after being the only major indicator to decline in November. That said, manufacturing remains a small portion of total employment. We tend to focus on other signals of labor force strength (initial claims, earnings growth, and consumer spending) which have shown constant strength even through some turbulent times for the manufacturing sector. On the inflation front, the prices paid index skyrocketed to 65.5 in December from 54.5 in November, with eighteen commodities rising in price while just three declined. So any claims that rising prices are just a reflection of the rebound in oil prices are missing the mark. Yes, energy prices have been on the rise since bottoming in mid-2014, but rising economic activity is starting to put pressure on a wide variety of inputs. This, paired with rising energy, is likely to push inflation above the Fed's 2% target in 2017. As a whole, today's report shows the Plow Horse manufacturing sector starting to hit its stride as the nation prepares to pass the reins to a new President. In other news this morning, construction spending increased 0.9% in November (+0.8% including revisions to October). New single-family home building led the way, while hotel construction and public schools also increased.


Crafty_Dog

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Crafty_Dog

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Wesbury: December Personal Income
« Reply #1208 on: January 30, 2017, 12:24:43 PM »
________________________________________
Personal Income Increased 0.3% in December To view this article, Click Here
Brian S. Wesbury, Chief Economist
Robert Stein, Deputy Chief Economist
Date: 1/30/2017

Personal income increased 0.3% in December, coming in below the consensus expected 0.4%. Personal consumption rose 0.5% in December, matching consensus expectations. Personal income is up 3.5% in the past year, while spending is up 4.5%.

Disposable personal income (income after taxes) increased 0.3% in December and is up 3.7% from a year ago. The gain in December was led by private-sector wages & salaries.

The overall PCE deflator (consumer inflation) rose 0.2% in December and is up 1.6% versus a year ago. The "core" PCE deflator, which excludes food and energy, increased 0.1% in December and is up 1.7% in the past year.

After adjusting for inflation, "real" consumption increased 0.3% in December and is up 2.8% from a year ago.

Implications: Last year ended on a solid note, with healthy gains in Christmas-time consumer spending and respectable income gains as well. Income increased 0.3% in December with private-sector wages & salaries bouncing back 0.4% after declining in the previous month. Incomes are up 3.5% in the past year and we expect further gains in the year ahead as the labor market continues to tighten. In turn, consumer spending will continue to grow as well. Spending rose 0.5% in December and is now up 4.5% in the past year. Today's report also shows inflation continuing to trudge higher. The PCE deflator, the Fed's favorite measure of inflation, rose 0.2% in December and is up 1.6% from a year ago. It still has not crossed 2%, but this is a sharp jump from just 0.6% inflation in the year ending in December 2015. In the past three months PCE prices are up at a 1.9% annual rate, right around the Fed's long-term target of 2%. Meanwhile, the "core" PCE deflator, which excludes food and energy, is up 1.7% from a year ago. We expect continued acceleration in year-ago comparison measures of inflation over the next few months, with a lot of the gain coming from energy prices. Together with continued employment gains, these figures support the case for at least three rate hikes by the Fed in 2017. The one consistent dark cloud in the income reports has been government redistribution. Overall government transfers to persons are up 3.3% in the past year. Before the Panic of 2008, government transfers – Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security, disability, welfare, food stamps, and unemployment insurance – were roughly 14% of income. In early 2010, they peaked at 18.5%. Now they're around 17%, but not falling any further. Redistribution hurts growth because it shifts resources away from productive ventures and, among those getting the transfers, weakens work incentives. That's why, for the time being, we still have a Plow Horse economy, not a Race Horse economy.
 

DougMacG

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Re: Wesbury: December Personal Income
« Reply #1209 on: January 30, 2017, 01:06:04 PM »
Also note that GDP went up 1.8% per year the last 8 years   - - -   as Wesbury predicted?     (

The good news is the predictability - that dismal policies bring dismal results.

The bad news is that we haven't really changed the policies yet.


Crafty_Dog

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January ISM Mfg Index up to 56.0
« Reply #1211 on: February 01, 2017, 09:45:55 PM »
The ISM Manufacturing Index Rose to 56.0 in January To view this article, Click Here
Brian S. Wesbury, Chief Economist
Robert Stein, Deputy Chief Economist
Date: 2/1/2017

The ISM manufacturing index rose to 56.0 in January, beating the consensus expected level of 55.0. (Levels higher than 50 signal expansion; levels below 50 signal contraction.)

The major measures of activity were all higher in January, and all stand above 50, signaling growth. The employment index jumped to 56.1 from 52.8 in December, while the production index increased to 61.4 from 59.4. The supplier deliveries index moved higher to 53.6 from 53.0, while the new orders index rose to 60.4 from 60.3 in December.

The prices paid index increased to 69.0 in January from 65.5 in December.

Implications: Manufacturing opened 2017 on a high note, with the ISM manufacturing survey hitting the highest reading in more than two years and the best reading to start a year going back to 2011. And every major category of activity showed a faster pace of expansion in January. Factories hit the ground running, with the production index rising to 61.4 in January, a multi-year high. Add in continued growth in the pace of new orders and production should continue to show healthy growth in the months ahead. Plus, President Trump has promised tax cuts and regulatory reforms, likely boosting confidence across industries. The employment index showed the largest increase in January, rising to 56.1 from 52.8 in December. That said, manufacturing remains a small portion of total employment. For a better picture of labor market health, we tend to focus on broader signals (initial claims, earnings growth, and consumer spending) which have shown constant strength even through some turbulent times for the manufacturing sector. On the inflation front, the prices paid index jumped to 69.0 in January from 65.5 in December, with more than twenty commodities rising in price while not a single commodity reported lower. So any suggestion that rising prices are just a reflection of the rebound in oil prices misses the mark. Rising economic activity, the lagged effect of loose monetary policy, is starting to put pressure on a wide variety of inputs, and it looks increasingly likely that inflation will rise above the Fed's 2% target in 2017. In other news earlier this morning, the ADP index says private payrolls increased 246,000 in January. Plugging this into our models suggests Friday's official Labor report will show a nonfarm increase of 197,000 (versus a consensus 175,000), although we may tweak this forecast slightly based on tomorrow's report on unemployment claims. On the housing front, pending home sales, which are contracts on existing homes, increased 1.6% in December, suggesting a small gain in closings on existing homes in January. The national Case-Shiller index, which measures home prices, increased 0.8% in November and is up 5.6% from a year ago, an acceleration from the 5.2% gain in the year ending in November 2015. Price gains in the past twelve months have been led by Seattle and Portland, with the slowest gains in New York City and Washington, DC. Construction spending declined 0.2% in December (unchanged including revisions to prior months), as a decline in manufacturing and educational facilities more than offset a pickup in home building.

objectivist1

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Trump Can Only Mitigate Economic Disaster - Not Prevent It...
« Reply #1212 on: February 03, 2017, 05:40:59 AM »
Irreversible Damage - The U.S. Economy Cannot Be Repaired

Brandon Smith - February 2, 2017


As I outlined in my article 'The False Economic Narrative Will Die In 2017', the mainstream media has been carefully crafting the propaganda meme that the Trump administration is inheriting a global economy in “ascension,” when in fact, the opposite is true. Trump enters office at a time of longstanding decline and will likely witness severe and accelerated decline over the course of the next year. The signs are already present, and this fits exactly with the basis for my prediction of the Trump election win — conservative movements are indeed being set up as scapegoats for a global economic crisis that international financiers actually created.

Plus, it doesn’t help that Trump keeps boasting about the farcical Dow hitting record highs after his entry into the White House. Talk about the perfect setup…

With the speed at which Trump is issuing executive orders, my concern is that people’s heads will be spinning so fast they will start to assume an appearance of economic progress. Here is the issue — some problems simply cannot be fixed, at least not in a top down fashion. Some disasters cannot be prevented. Sometimes, a crisis has to run its course before a nation or society or economy can return to stability. This is invariably true of the underlying crisis within the U.S. economy.

It is imperative that liberty activists and conservatives avoid false hope in fiscal recovery and remain vigilant and prepared for a breakdown within the system. Despite the sudden political sea change with Trump and the Republican party in majority control of the D.C. apparatus, there is nothing that can be done through government to ease fiscal tensions at this time. Here are some of the primary reasons why:

Government Does Not Create Wealth

Government is a wealth-devouring machine. The bigger the government, the more adept it is at snatching capital and misallocating it. Such a system is inherently unequipped to repair an economy in a stagflationary spiral.

I’m hearing a whole lot of talk lately on all the jobs that will be created through Trump’s infrastructure spending plans, which reminds me of the desperation at the onset of the Great Depression and the efforts by Herbert Hoover to reignite the U.S. economy through a series of public works programs. Reality does not support a successful outcome for this endeavor.

First off, Trump’s ideas for infrastructure spending to kick start a U.S. recovery are not new. The Obama administration and Congress passed the largest transportation spending bill in more than a decade in 2015 and pushed for a similar strategy to what is now being suggested by Trump. I should point out though that like Herbert Hoover, Obama’s efforts in this area were essentially fruitless. Obama was the first president since Hoover to see “official” annual U.S. GDP growth drop below 3 percent for the entirety of his presidency, with GDP in 2016 dropping to a dismal 1.6 percent.

Though projects like the Hoover Dam were epic in scope and electrifying to the public imagination during the Depression, they did little to fuel the overall long-term prospects of the American economy. This is because government is incapable of creating wealth; it can only steal wealth from the citizenry through taxation to pay debts conjured out of thin air, or, it can strike a devil’s bargain with central banks to print its way to fake prosperity.

Some might argue that Trump is more likely to redirect funds from poorly conceived Obama-era programs instead of increasing taxes or printing, but this does not change the bigger picture. Redirected funds are still taxpayer funds, and those funds would be far better spent if they were returned to taxpayers rather than wasted in a vain effort to increase GDP by a percentage point. Beyond this, the number of jobs generated through the process will be a drop in the bucket compared to the 100 million plus people no longer employed within the U.S. at this time.

Bottom line? Though new roads and a wall on the southern border are winners for many conservatives, infrastructure spending is a non-solution in preventing a long-term fiscal disaster.

Interdependency Is Hard To Break

Another prospect for raising funds to pay for job generating public works projects is the use of tariffs on foreign imports. Specifically, imports of goods from countries which have maintained unfair trade advantages through global agreements like NAFTA, CAFTA or the China Trade Bill. This is obviously a practical concept and it was always the intention of the founding father post-revolution for government to generate most of its funding through taxation of foreign imports and interstate commerce, rather than taxation of the hard earned incomes of the citizenry. However, the idea is not without consequences.

Unfortunately, globalists have spent the better part of a half-century ensuring that individual nations are completely financially dependent on one another. The U.S. is at the very CENTER of this interdependency with our currency as the world reserve standard. In order to change the nature of the inderdependent system, we have to change the nature of our participation within that system. This means, in order to assert large tariffs on countries like China (which Trump has suggested), America would have to be willing to sacrifice the main advantage it enjoys within the interdependent model — we would have to sacrifice the dollar’s world reserve status.

Keep in mind, this is likely to be done for us in an aggressive manner by nations like China. China’s considerable dollar and treasury bond holds can be liquidated, and despite claims by mainstream shills, this WILL in fact have destructive effects on the U.S. economy.

Also keep in mind that with higher tariffs come higher prices on the shelf. The majority of goods consumed by Americans come from outside the country. Higher tariffs only work to our advantage when we have a manufacturing base capable of producing the goods we need at prices we can afford. The American manufacturing base within our own nation is essentially nonexistent compared to the Great Depression. In order to levy tariffs we would need a level of production support we simply do not have.

The point is, an unprecedented change in America's production dynamic would have to happen so that we do not face heavy fiscal consequences for the use of tariffs as an economic weapon.

Manufacturing Takes Time To Rebuild

Much excitement has been garnered by reports that certain U.S. corporations will be bringing some manufacturing back within our borders over the course of Trump’s first term as president. And certainly this is something that needs to happen. We should have never outsourced our manufacturing capability in the first place. But, is this too little too late? I believe so.

I remember back in 2008/2009 mainstream economists were applauding the Federal Reserve’s bailout efforts and the call for quantitative easing, because, they argued, this would diminish the dollar’s value on the global market, which would make American goods less expensive, and by extension inspire a manufacturing renaissance. Of course, this never happened, which only adds to the mountain of evidence proving that most mainstream economists are intellectual idiots.

It is important that we do not fall into the same false-hope trap in 2017. While Trump may or may not handle matters more aggressively, there is only so much that can be accomplished through politics. Rebuilding a manufacturing base after decades of outsourcing takes time. Many years, in fact. Factories have to be commissioned, money has to change many hands, wages have to be scouted for the best possible labor per-dollar spent and people have to be trained from the very ground up in how to produce goods again. In many cases, the skill sets required to maintain functioning factories in the U.S. (from engineers to machinists to assembly line labor to the people who know how to manage it all) just don’t exist anymore.  All we have left are millions of retail and food service workers forming mobs to demand $15 an hour, which is simply not going to encourage a return to manufacturing.

Beyond this, at least in the short term, America will have a much stronger dollar on the global market, rather than a weaker dollar, due to the fact that the Federal Reserve has initiated a renewed series of interest rate increases just as Trump entered office.  While the mainstream theorizes that the Fed will turn "dovish" and back away from rate hikes, I think this is a rather naive notion.  It serves the elites far better to create a battle between Trump and the Fed - therefore, I see no reason for the Fed to back away from its rate hike process.  Trump will demand a weaker dollar, the Fed won't give it to him, and ultimately, the global economy will start to see the dollar as a risky venture and dump it as the world reserve; which is what the globalist have wanted all along so that they can introduce the SDR as a bridge to a new world currency.

With a "strong" dollar (relative to other indexes) there is even LESS incentive for foreign nations to buy our goods now than there was after the credit crisis in 2008. If the dollar loses world reserve status (as I believe it will during Trump’s first term), then at that point we will have a swiftly falling currency — but too swift to fuel a manufacturing reboot.

Is there even enough internal wealth to support the rise of manufacturing within the U.S. for a period of time necessary for our economy to rebalance?  If there is I’m not seeing it.  We are a nation mired in debt.  So much so that even selling off our natural resources would not erase the problem.

Ultimately, the shift away from being tied to a globalized system towards a self-contained producer nation with a citizenry wealthy enough to sustain that production in light of limited exports to foreign buyers is a shift that requires incredible foresight, precision and ample time. It is not something that can be ramrodded into existence through force or by government decree. In fact, the act of trying to force the change haphazardly will only agitate an economy already on the verge of calamity.

Solutions Start With The Citizenry, Not Washington

I understand that conservatives in particular want to “make America great again,” and I fully agree with that goal. But, someone has to point out the inconsistencies in the current strategy and recognize that the situation is beyond repair. To make America great again would require decentralized efforts to maximize production and self reliance at a local level, not centralized federal tinkering with the economy. The globalists have been far too thorough in their programs of interdependency. The only way out now is for the system to crash and for the right people to be in place to rebuild.

Sadly, not only will a crash result in great tragedy for many Americans, but it is also an outcome the globalists prefer. They believe that THEY will be the men in the right place at the right time to rebuild the system in an even more centralized fashion. They hope to sacrifice the old world order to inspire the social desperation needed to convince the masses of the need for a “new world order.” Again, this crash cannot be avoided, it can only be mitigated. We can prepare and become self sufficient. We can fight to ensure that the globalists are not in a position to rebuild the system in their image once the dust settles. But, we should not place too much expectation that the Trump administration will be able to solve any of our economic problems, if that is even their intent.  The solution remains in our hands, not in the hands of the White House.

"You have enemies?  Good.  That means that you have stood up for something, sometime in your life." - Winston Churchill.

ccp

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History of Bank Accounts (interest on savings)
« Reply #1213 on: February 06, 2017, 08:12:42 AM »
I remember in the 60s watching my $100 dollars "earn" or accrue 5% interest just for being deposited at a bank and thinking that ain't much.  Now to get anywhere near that is hawked as some kind of great deal:

https://www.nerdwallet.com/blog/banking/history-of-bank-accounts/
« Last Edit: February 07, 2017, 10:31:29 AM by Crafty_Dog »



objectivist1

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Global Debt Level is Unsustainable...
« Reply #1216 on: February 13, 2017, 07:34:48 PM »
The author is correct here - this ought to be blindingly obvious at this point:

www.sovereignman.com/trends/worlds-largest-hedge-fund-manager-predicts-bleak-future-for-markets-20855/

"You have enemies?  Good.  That means that you have stood up for something, sometime in your life." - Winston Churchill.

ccp

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Re: US Economics, the stock market , and other investment/savings strategies
« Reply #1217 on: February 14, 2017, 05:47:34 AM »
Plan B for billionaires is a opulent underground bunker fortress in New Zealand probably lined with terra cotta warriors.

For us - forget about it. 

G M

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Re: US Economics, the stock market , and other investment/savings strategies
« Reply #1218 on: February 14, 2017, 11:21:57 AM »
Plan B for billionaires is a opulent underground bunker fortress in New Zealand probably lined with terra cotta warriors.

For us - forget about it. 

New Zealand will probably be a base for the PLA in the not too distant future.

Crafty_Dog

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Re: US Economics, the stock market , and other investment/savings strategies
« Reply #1219 on: February 14, 2017, 03:50:28 PM »
PLA?

G M

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Re: US Economics, the stock market , and other investment/savings strategies
« Reply #1220 on: February 14, 2017, 04:39:08 PM »
PLA?

PLA= People's Liberation Army-China

Crafty_Dog

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Wesbury: Room to Grow
« Reply #1221 on: February 14, 2017, 11:10:52 PM »
Monday Morning Outlook
________________________________________
Room to Grow To view this article, Click Here
Brian S. Wesbury, Chief Economist
Robert Stein, Deputy Chief Economist
Date: 2/6/2017

The US economy has grown at an average annual rate of only 2.1% since the recovery started in mid-2009, far slower than during the economic expansions of the 1980s and 1990s.

Many analysts tie some of the slower growth to slower expansion in the labor force due to retiring Boomers and the end of the shift of women into the paid job market. But productivity (output per hour) has been slow as well. Since mid-2009, productivity is up at a 1.0% annual rate versus a pace of 2.1% at the same point in the recoveries after the 1981-82 recession and 1990-91 recession. The expansion in 2001-07 lasted six years during which productivity grew 2.5% per year.

In other words, if productivity growth had been just as fast in the current expansion as in the expansions of the 80s and 90s, real GDP growth would have been averaging around 3.2% per year, not 2.1%. In that case, much of the current angst about the US economy would be gone.

Two popular theories try to explain why productivity growth has been so slow.

One is the "Great Stagnation" theory made famous by economist Robert Gordon, among others. Gordon believes humanity – usually, but not always, led by the US – made massive leaps in technological progress and implementation between 1870 and 1970: incandescent light bulbs, automobiles, central heating, refrigerators, the germ theory of disease, window screens, radios, telephones, television, air conditioners, airplanes, sewer systems, and indoor plumbing.

Gordon says those kinds of achievements, directly addressing problems humans have wanted to address since the beginning of time, simply can't be duplicated again, and so we're simply going to have to learn to live with slower economic growth. In turn, he proposes government policies that focus on redistributing income to lower earners.

No one doubts the transformative nature of the inventions of the late 19th Century and early 20th Century. But pretending that we can know the future path of technological advances is the kind of hubris at the heart of centrally planned economies.

Moreover, we think any slowdown in progress is due to the larger size of government, which puts politicians in charge of shifting resources around according to political expediency rather than letting those resources find their most efficient use. It's no wonder that the biggest leaps in innovation started when the US government was tiny compared to today's size.

Think about the possibilities of driverless cars or doubling the length of healthy vigorous adult life (both mentally and physically). The economic value of these kinds of breakthroughs would be enormous.

Another theory of why we have to settle for slower growth is our economy has too much debt. But debt, by itself, is not a reason for slower growth. Just think about your own situation. If you woke up this morning and had $50,000 more debt than you previously realized, would you work more or less in the future? More, obviously, which makes output go up, not down.

Debt can be a problem if debtors suddenly decide they won't pay their obligations. In that case, lenders can become insolvent, causing financial strains until the economy adapts.

But we don't see a reason for a sudden spike in defaults by borrowers. Seven years ago, consumers were 90+ days delinquent on more than a $1 trillion in consumer loans. But that figure has declined every year since and is now at $400 billion.

Although the government's debt is at a record high, net interest on the debt is still low relative to both GDP and federal revenue. Even if interest rates on government debt went to 4% across the yield curve tomorrow, net interest relative to GDP and revenue would still be lower than the average during the 1980s and 1990s.

Meanwhile, capital standards are higher and leverage ratios lower at US financial institutions. In other words, debt is not holding the US economy back.

We believe the US is at a pivotal point right now, with a chance to curb spending, cuts tax rates, and rollback the regulatory state. If it does so, many of the same analysts now telling us we have to accept slower growth will be spinning their wheels inventing theories about why growth suddenly picked back up.


objectivist1

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David Stockman: "Everything Will Grind To a Halt in 2017"
« Reply #1223 on: February 27, 2017, 09:35:01 AM »
David Stockman correctly diagnoses (IMHO) the current debt calamity we are living in, and says that stocks are wildly overvalued, and Trump is powerless to stop this train wreck from occurring this year:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7xgNncFHAng

"You have enemies?  Good.  That means that you have stood up for something, sometime in your life." - Winston Churchill.

Crafty_Dog

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Re: US Economics, the stock market , and other investment/savings strategies
« Reply #1224 on: February 27, 2017, 10:55:15 AM »
Eventually he may be proven right, but it is worth noting that Stockman has been wrong for several decades now on pretty much everything.


Crafty_Dog

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Wesbury: Feb. Mfg Index
« Reply #1225 on: March 01, 2017, 10:25:29 AM »
Data Watch
________________________________________
The ISM Manufacturing Index Rose to 57.7 in February To view this article, Click Here
Brian S. Wesbury, Chief Economist
Robert Stein, Deputy Chief Economist
Date: 3/1/2017

The ISM manufacturing index rose to 57.7 in February, easily beating the consensus expected level of 56.2. (Levels higher than 50 signal expansion; levels below 50 signal contraction.)

The major measures of activity were mostly higher in February, and all stand above 50, signaling growth. The new orders index jumped to 65.1 from 60.4 in January, while the production index increased to 62.9 from 61.4. The supplier deliveries index moved higher to 54.8 from 53.6. The employment index fell to 54.2 from 56.1 in January.

The prices paid index declined to 68.0 in February from 69.0 in January.

Implications: The ISM manufacturing survey hit a two-and-a-half year high in February, and is off to the best start to a year since 2011. Factories continue to ramp up activity, with the production index rising to 62.9 in February as seventeen of eighteen industries reported growth. Add in continued growth in the pace of new orders and production should continue to show healthy growth in the months ahead. Plus, President Trump has promised tax cuts and regulatory reforms, likely boosting confidence across industries. The employment index was the only major index to decline in February, but remember that levels about 50 signal growth, so the February reading of 54.2 represents continued expansion but at a slower pace than in January. That said, manufacturing remains a small portion of total employment. For a better picture of labor market health, we tend to focus on broader signals (initial claims, earnings growth, and consumer spending) which have shown constant strength even through some turbulent times for the manufacturing sector. On the inflation front, the prices paid index was nearly unchanged at 68.0 in February from 69.0 in January, with more than twenty commodities rising in price while just one, scrap metal, reported lower. So any suggestion that rising prices are just a reflection of the rebound in oil prices misses the mark. Rising economic activity, the lagged effect of loose monetary policy, is putting pressure on a wide variety of inputs, and putting pressure on the Fed not to fall behind the curve in raising rates that are too low for the current environment. In other economic news this morning, construction spending declined 1.0% in January (-0.1% including revisions to prior months), as a decline in state and local construction of airport terminals and bridges more than offset a pickup in home building.


objectivist1

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Brandon Smith's latest...
« Reply #1227 on: March 10, 2017, 05:55:22 AM »
Are We Witnessing The Weirdest Moment In Economic History?

Wednesday, 08 March 2017    Brandon Smith


It is an unfortunate reality that most people tend to be oblivious to massive sea changes in geopolitics and economics. You would think that these events would catch the immediate attention of everyone as they happen, but usually it is not until they realize that the microcosm of their personal lives is subject to the consequences of the macrocosm that they wake up and take notice.

There are, however, ways to train yourself to pick up on signals within the news cycle and within political and financial rhetoric; signals that indicate a great shift is perhaps on the way. Sometimes these initial signs are subtle, sometimes they are as subtle as a feminist slut-walk. I would point out that over the next few months there are dangerous correlations so numerous and blatant in the economic sphere that I would almost rather watch a marching gaggle of frumpy feminists wearing nothing but electrical tape than bear witness to the mayhem that is about to strike the unwitting public.

What am I talking about? Well, let’s go through the list…

Federal Reserve Meeting March 14-15th

As my readers know well, I have been warning since before the election that the Fed would use a Trump presidency as an opportunity to pull the plug on near-zero interest rates and remove a primary pillar supporting stock markets — stock buybacks made possible by free overnight loans to numerous banks and corporations. Without QE and low interest rates the equities bubble will inevitably implode.

Corporate earnings certainly aren’t holding up stocks, neither is GDP or consumer spending. The Fed is the only determining factor of the ongoing bull market. Anyone who claims otherwise is probably a mainstream analyst or overzealous day trader with a vested interest in keeping the illusion going.

It is not surprising to me at all that the “rate hike odds” for March have been increased by mainstream analysts to 90% in the span of a week. I don’t know why anyone uses these arbitrary odds as an indicator of anything. I’ve been receiving emails all month asking me if I still believe the Fed will hike rates while the odds are “so low.” Look, the Fed does not make decisions at these meetings. They make decisions months in advance and the meetings are window dressing.

Too many people operate under the delusion that the central bank wants to continue propping up stocks, which is why they cannot grasp why the Fed would raise rates. In reality, the stage has been perfectly set to allow the bubble to implode. When the elites have a perfect scapegoat, they use it, and conservative movements represent that perfect scapegoat today.

The important thing to remember, though, is the timing of this particular meeting…

U.S. Debt-Ceiling Suspension Ends March 15th

So, in case you weren’t tracking the economic situation two years ago, the U.S. government almost went bust (in a sense) in 2015. The debt ceiling sets limits on how much the government can borrow to fund itself, and that limit was hit hard under the Obama administration after he managed to nearly double the national debt during his tenure. Congress passed legislation to allow borrowing to continue until March 2017, and of course, much of that capital was “borrowed” from the Federal Reserve, which, of course, creates it out of thin air. With the return of the debt ceiling, the question is — will Congress be able to extend and delay again? With Trump running on a platform of fiscal responsibility, CAN they extend again?  Do they even want to, or is this an engineered crisis event?

Once again, the timing of all this is a little odd. The Fed is raising rates into the first year of the Trump presidency leaving equities increasingly open to destabilization. In addition, the government might not be able to continue borrowing from them, or there will be a renewed extension but the costs of borrowing will run much higher. In either case, this month seems to pronounce the beginning of something; a considerable move away from the standard operating procedures that the elites have been using for the past several years. With such changes come consequences, always.

Formal Initiation Of Brexit On March 15th

The skeptics have been telling me for months that even though I was right about the Brexit vote victory the elites “would never allow” the British to leave the EU. Well, it doesn’t look that way to me so far. Theresa May plans to formally notify the EU of British exit on March 15th triggering two years of negotiations which will undoubtedly send economic shock waves throughout the globe on a regular basis.

Of course the Brexit will move forward! Why not? Globalists need a continuing atmosphere of crisis to distract the masses from their great global reset, and they need multiple scapegoats for the economic disaster that their reset will cause. Enter conservative movements in Europe; once again the perfect target to pin a crisis on.

French Elections Start April 23rd, End May 7th

Yet another election in which the EU hangs in the balance. Recent polls indicate that Marine Le Pen, the designated “populist" candidate, is falling behind. I have to ask, though, have we not learned our lesson yet on the meaninglessness of political polls? I think most of us have.

I believe Le Pen will be one of the final two candidates to move on to the election in May, and though I am not as certain as I was on Brexit and Trump, I am going to go ahead and predict a Le Pen win. If there is any sizable terrorist event in the next couple of months in the EU, or expanded Muslim riots, she is a guaranteed win. This brings up the very real prospect of a “Frexit” in the near future, and analysts should expect that a Le Pen win will be met with some panic in the financial world.

Potential Italian Election Move On April 30th

The Italian political process is a little confusing to me, but what I can tell you is that this spring or early summer you will probably be hearing a lot more about it. Former Italian prime minister and current Italian Democratic Party leader Matteo Renzi is set to decide on a the date for a leadership vote, which may come as early as April 30th. The outcome of this vote will likely decide how soon the next official Italian election will take place.

The election is required to be held before May 2018, but there is increasing pressure to hold elections in 2017, perhaps even this coming summer. I would not be at all shocked to see a surprise announcement of an early Italian election after the leadership vote is held.

Why should anyone care? The consensus is that Renzi’s party will be overrun by anti-EU factions and that this may result in a kind of “Italiexit.” The outcome of Italy’s series of votes and political restructuring will have wide reaching effects on the psychology of the markets for many months to come.

German Federal Election Held September 24th

Yes, even Germany is quaking this year in the wake of a potential “populist” tsunami. Angela Merkel is exceedingly unloved by her own people lately as her approval ratings collapse. Once-silent sovereignty champions in the country are becoming more and more vocal about Merkel’s rather insane open immigration policies which were the key element that drew millions of Muslims into the EU. It was the German government’s promise of endless entitlement programs that created the incentive for the mass migration in the first place, and now, finally, the German people are fed up with the complete lack of cultural assimilation and what many see as the destruction of western values.

I do not think that Germany will abandon the supranational concept of the EU regardless of the outcome of the election, but the removal of Merkel would signal a less agreeable Germany, which would exacerbate the already tottering European Union. Meaning more economic uncertainty in 2017.

If You Thought 2016 Was Weird…

If you thought 2016 was weird, I suggest you get comfortable with the surreal because it is not going away anytime soon. 2017 is a veritable treasure trove of falling elevators, and I haven’t even covered half of the issues facing the economy this year. But what about the macro-analysis?

To summarize, it seems to me that many of these events, stacked so closely together, are not coincidental in their timing. As I have noted in articles such as The Economic End Game Explained, globalists have been openly planning for decades to set in motion a vast financial overhaul and the launch of a single global economy and currency (the seeds being planted starting in 2018). If this is still their timeline, then it would follow that they would need a series of fiscal earthquakes designed to shake up the “old world order” to make way for a “new world order.”

Perhaps each of these events will result in a “stable” outcome and there is nothing to be concerned about. That said, I don’t believe in chance. Most geopolitical outcomes are influenced by internationalist players, which makes the outcomes of these events predictable. This is what made the Brexit predictable, and it is what made Trump’s victory predictable. Everything about the confluence of political and economic events in 2017 suggests to me a festering crisis atmosphere.

As I have always said, economic collapse is a process, not a singular moment in time. This process lulls the masses into complacency. You can show them warning sign after warning sign, but most of them have no concept of what a collapse is. They are waiting for a cinematic moment of revelation, a financial explosion, when really, the whole disaster is happening in slow motion right under their noses. Economies do not explode, they drown as the water rises one inch at a time.

 
"You have enemies?  Good.  That means that you have stood up for something, sometime in your life." - Winston Churchill.

DougMacG

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Re: US Economics, the stock market , and other investment/savings strategies
« Reply #1228 on: March 10, 2017, 09:45:30 AM »
"...Weirdest Moment In Economic History?"

It is not political that Democrat Janet Yellen would raise interest rates up on Donald Trump's election. Near zero interest rate policy is wrong and needs correcting. What is political is that she did not do it 8 years ago!

Right now we risk a repeat of the Volcker recession of 81-82. We have the tightening of money preceding the stimulus of tax rate cut reform.

Are we really stupid or ignorant enough to repeat this catastrophic error?   Yes.  Why wouldn't we? We repeat and continue all of our other economic errors.

Crafty_Dog

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Re: US Economics, the stock market , and other investment/savings strategies
« Reply #1229 on: March 10, 2017, 01:43:57 PM »
a) The Volcker tightening was in the context of 12% inflation.   Keep in mind the implications of this in the context of baseline budgeting i.e. if inflation falls quicker than anticipated (as was the case) then the spending "cuts" have a larger % of real cuts in relation to nominal cuts.

b) Are you agreeing with the Keynesian notion that the low rates have stimulated the economy?

==================================

http://scottgrannis.blogspot.com/2017/03/february-jobs-report-changes-nothing.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+blogspot%2FtMBeq+%28Calafia+Beach+Pundit%29


« Last Edit: March 10, 2017, 02:32:48 PM by Crafty_Dog »

DougMacG

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Re: US Economics, the stock market , and other investment/savings strategies
« Reply #1230 on: March 10, 2017, 06:55:22 PM »
"The Volcker tightening was in the context of 12% inflation."  

"Keep in mind the implications of this in the context of baseline budgeting i.e. if inflation falls quicker than anticipated (as was the case) then the spending "cuts" have a larger % of real cuts in relation to nominal cuts."   -

"Are you agreeing with the Keynesian notion that the low rates have stimulated the economy?"
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
QE, in my view, was like adding gas when the problem was flat tires.  I think that QE and low rates were partly stimulative (it's easier to buy a house, car or appliance when interest rates are at zero), but it was not the right solution to the right problem - and it did cause immeasurable other damage (savings rate, etc).

Low rates and QE aren't exactly the same thing.  They were injecting money in other ways too.  

Unlike Grannis and Wesbury, I think QE and low rates contributed to the run-up of the stock market during the slow growth Obama years.  The S&P 500 went up 235% over 8 years while the economy was growing at 1.9% /yr.  Was it stimulative for the market to surge?   Not noticeably.  It didn't address what was wrong (taxes and regulations).

Will a move toward tightening of money now will have some contractionary effect?  I think slightly yes, but not the main factor.  The economy could easily grow past a little tightening if we would simultaneously correct our other policy mistakes.  

My pessimism mostly comes from the tax reform that is delayed or not happening. I don't see how you bump growth from 2% to 4% without fixing the screwed up tax code.  We are expecting different results from doing the same things.  The delay in lowering rates makes people put off transactions and taxable income whenever they can.  Inaction from employers and investors is the enemy of growth.  And if/when expectations fall, the positive economic effect we see now is gone.

On the other side of it, Trump was right to go bold on removing excess regulations early.  If those were well chosen they may already be having a positive effect.
« Last Edit: March 10, 2017, 09:27:20 PM by DougMacG »

G M

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Derivatives
« Reply #1231 on: March 11, 2017, 07:06:19 PM »


http://www.jsmineset.com/2017/03/07/in-the-news-today-2621/

So, exactly how much of a problem is this?

Crafty_Dog

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Re: US Economics, the stock market , and other investment/savings strategies
« Reply #1232 on: March 12, 2017, 11:49:23 AM »
I asked Scott Grannis and this is what he said:

"Derivatives are poorly understood by almost everyone, including the author of this article. This vastly overstates the case by many orders of magnitude."

-Scott Grannis
scottgrannis.blogspot.com

G M

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Re: US Economics, the stock market , and other investment/savings strategies
« Reply #1233 on: March 12, 2017, 12:52:56 PM »
I asked Scott Grannis and this is what he said:

"Derivatives are poorly understood by almost everyone, including the author of this article. This vastly overstates the case by many orders of magnitude."

-Scott Grannis
scottgrannis.blogspot.com


Are derivatives a problem? If so, where on the scale, 1 being no issue, 10 being TEOTWAWKI?


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US Economics, investment strategies: Forum forewarned ahead of last crash!
« Reply #1235 on: May 17, 2017, 08:37:51 AM »
Flashback:
http://dogbrothers.com/phpBB2/index.php?topic=985.msg7691#msg7691
Rick N, October 22, 2006:
There will be a lot of capital gains realization in 2007 and 2008 as many investors opt to pay the 15% tax rate ahead of possible rate hikes if the Dems control Congress and the White House.  Coupled with the projected decrease in corporate profits in the second half of next year, the likely increase in selling pressure on all asset classes, stocks, real estate and commodities, increases the risk of negative economic and investment data.
-----------------------------

This all came to be true like clockwork, and a point I have tried to make after the fact.  Investors lost confidence and had powerful reasons to pull back ahead of the expected tax rate hikes on capital and investors.  The 2006 election flipped power in Washington to the tax rate hikers and the likelihood of them also taking control of the White House in 2008 led to the crash.  The Federal Reserve and federal government-caused bubble was the other hand in it, left exposed when growth ended.  Democrats kept delaying their promised tax rate hikes, but by continuing to promise them, they stomped out all optimism and growth in the economy. 

It is a nice feature of this forum that Rick alerted anyone paying attention here to this very real economic risk before it happened!


Crafty_Dog

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NICE FIND Doug!

Crafty_Dog

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Wesbury: May Personal Income
« Reply #1238 on: June 30, 2017, 10:31:20 AM »
Personal Income Increased 0.4% in May To view this article, Click Here
Brian S. Wesbury, Chief Economist
Robert Stein, Deputy Chief Economist
Date: 6/30/2017

Personal income increased 0.4% in May, (0.3% including revisions to prior months). The consensus expected a 0.3% gain. Personal consumption increased 0.1%, (+0.2% including prior months' revisions). The consensus expected a gain of 0.1%. Personal income is up 3.5% in the past year, while spending is up 4.2%.

Disposable personal income (income after taxes) increased 0.5% in May and is up 3.7% from a year ago. The gain in May was led by dividend income.

The overall PCE deflator (consumer inflation) declined 0.1% in May but is up 1.4% versus a year ago. The "core" PCE deflator, which excludes food and energy, rose 0.1% in May and is up 1.4% in the past year.

After adjusting for inflation, "real" consumption rose 0.1% in May and is up 2.7% from a year ago.

Implications: Good news for consumers. Incomes and spending continued to move higher in May, led by the fastest growth in dividends since December 2012. Incomes are showing the strongest start to a year since 2014 and are up 3.5% in the past year. But it wasn't just dividends that rose in May. All major categories of income rose, as well. Along with the rising incomes, spending ticked up 0.1%. As always, we like to take a step back and look at the trend. While spending growth has outpaced income over the past year, incomes are up at a 3.6% annual rate in the past three months compared to a 3.3% pace for spending. Some stories are claiming consumers are in trouble, but the facts suggest otherwise. Consumer debts are at a record high in dollar terms, but so are consumer assets. Comparing the two, debts are the lowest relative to assets since 2000 (and that's back during the internet bubble when asset values were artificially high). Meanwhile, the financial obligations ratio - which compares debt and other recurring payments to income – is still hovering near the lowest levels of the past thirty years. The US consumer is in excellent shape. On the inflation front, the PCE deflator declined 0.1% in May but is up 1.4% in the past year. By contrast, a year ago, in May 2016, the 12-month change for prices was only 1.0%; in May 2015, it was up a meager 0.3%. In other words, we think inflation is still in a long-term accelerating trend. Falling energy prices will hold inflation readings down again in June but we expect to be close to the Fed's 2% inflation target at year end, which is consistent with the Fed raising rates again in September and then starting balance sheet normalization on October 1. In other news this morning, the Chicago PMI, which measures manufacturing sentiment in that region, rose to 65.7 in June from 59.4, the highest reading in more than three years. As a result, we think Monday's national ISM Manufacturing index will show a gain for June.

G M

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Everything is fine...
« Reply #1239 on: June 30, 2017, 02:34:55 PM »
http://freebeacon.com/issues/cbo-treasury-run-cash-next-3-months-leading-default-delay-payments/


CBO: Treasury to Run Out of Cash in Next 3 Months, Leading to Default or Delay of Payments
Treasury may run out earlier if the government spends more money or takes in less revenue

BY: Ali Meyer    
June 30, 2017 5:00 am

The Treasury is set to run out of cash in October, which may lead to a default on debt obligations or payment delays for government programs, according to a report from the Congressional Budget Office.

On March 15, 2017, the suspension of the debt limit expired and since then the Treasury has been able to borrow additional funds without violating the debt ceiling.

"The Congressional Budget Office projects that if the debt limit remains unchanged, those measures will be exhausted and the Treasury will most likely run out of cash in early to mid-October," the report states. "The government would then be unable to pay its obligations fully, so it would have to delay making payments for its programs and activities, default on its debt obligations, or both."

The amount of money the government spends on programs and the amount it collects in taxes could change from the budget office projections, so the office warns that the Treasury could run out of funds even earlier.

Currently, the federal deficit stands at $693 billion, which is an increase of $134 billion than what it projected in January. The federal government has an outstanding debt of $19.8 trillion, which includes $14.3 trillion in public debt and $5.5 trillion held by government accounts.

Spending on major government programs such as Social Security and Medicare causes the amount of borrowing to increase. For example, payments to Medicare Advantage and Medicare Part D plans will total $23 billion, spending on Social Security benefits will total roughly $23 billion and funds for active-duty military and recipients of Supplemental Security Income will total roughly $25 billion.

According to the report, unless the debt limit is raised, the Treasury will not be able to issue additional debt.

"That restriction would ultimately lead to delays of payments for government programs and activities, a default on the government's debt obligations, or both," the budget office said. "CBO estimates that without an increase in the debt limit, the Treasury, by using all available extraordinary measures, would most likely be able to continue borrowing and have sufficient cash to make its unusual payments until early to mid-October of this year."

Crafty_Dog

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Re: US Economics, the stock market , and other investment/savings strategies
« Reply #1240 on: June 30, 2017, 09:46:10 PM »
"Currently, the federal deficit stands at $693 billion, which is an increase of $134 billion than what it projected in January."

WTF?

ccp

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dollar drops
« Reply #1241 on: July 01, 2017, 12:36:03 PM »
Crafty has always noted Scott Grannis and others have pointed out to watch the dollar so I wonder if this is of import:


http://www.reuters.com/article/us-global-forex-idUSKBN19L04P?il=0

I also wonder if the Illinois budget crises could start the eventual  downward spiral.
Could that be the catalyst everyone is looking out for? Like the smoke behind the fire?  Or the Lehman Brothers canary in the coal mine so to speak.

G M

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Re: dollar drops
« Reply #1242 on: July 01, 2017, 12:40:09 PM »
Crafty has always noted Scott Grannis and others have pointed out to watch the dollar so I wonder if this is of import:


http://www.reuters.com/article/us-global-forex-idUSKBN19L04P?il=0

I also wonder if the Illinois budget crises could start the eventual  downward spiral.
Could that be the catalyst everyone is looking out for? Like the smoke behind the fire?  Or the Lehman Brothers canary in the coal mine so to speak.

The system is ripe for cascading failure. The deep state doesn't mind having it happen on Trump's watch.


ccp

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Re: US Economics, the stock market , and other investment/savings strategies
« Reply #1244 on: July 01, 2017, 01:33:51 PM »
GM posts:

***http://www.foxbusiness.com/politics/2017/06/30/high-tax-connecticut-fails-to-pass-budget-as-fiscal-situation-worsens.html***

I am all but certain that as SOON as Christie is gone in NJ (come Nov) and the Dems take over the governorship, I will have to cough up more extortion money to the Dem-union-liberal lawyer-racket/ mobsters.

Christie did hold the line on taxes and I give him credit for that.

Despite some of the highest taxes in the US like most Dem/mobster controlled blue states there is no doubt they will go up again.





G M

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Re: US Economics, the stock market , and other investment/savings strategies
« Reply #1245 on: July 01, 2017, 01:35:01 PM »
GM posts:

***http://www.foxbusiness.com/politics/2017/06/30/high-tax-connecticut-fails-to-pass-budget-as-fiscal-situation-worsens.html***

I am all but certain that as SOON as Christie is gone in NJ (come Nov) and the Dems take over the governorship, I will have to cough up more extortion money to the Dem-union-liberal lawyer-racket/ mobsters.

Christie did hold the line on taxes and I give him credit for that.

Despite some of the highest taxes in the US like most Dem/mobster controlled blue states there is no doubt they will go up again.






My advice is to get out while you can.

Crafty_Dog

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Re: US Economics, the stock market , and other investment/savings strategies
« Reply #1246 on: July 01, 2017, 09:27:02 PM »
The one party states will come to regret their choices too late.

Crafty_Dog

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Wesbury: The road to normal starts in September
« Reply #1247 on: July 26, 2017, 07:34:32 PM »
Research Reports
________________________________________
The Road to Normal Starts in September To view this article, Click Here
Brian S. Wesbury, Chief Economist
Robert Stein, Deputy Chief Economist
Date: 7/26/2017

The Federal Reserve made no changes to interest rates today and made almost no changes to the text of its statement. However, the wording changes it did make strongly support our view the Fed will announce the start of balance sheet reductions at the end of its next meeting on September 20.

First, the Fed qualified its reference to maintaining its current policy of rolling over principal payments by saying this was the policy only for the "time being."

Second, at the last meeting in June, the Fed said renormalization would start "this year." Now it says "relatively soon," the same language Fed Chief Yellen used at the press conference (but not the Fed's official statement) back in June.

Third, back in June the Fed said it "currently" expected to start renormalizing the balance sheet. That left the Fed wiggle room to change its own expectation, as if it anticipated the possibility of making a change to its timing. Now, by removing "currently," the Fed is essentially saying the likelihood of changing its mind is much lower.

Put it all together and it looks like an announcement about renormalization is very likely to happen at the next meeting. Moreover, there were no dissents at all from today's statement, unlike in June, when Minneapolis President Neel Kashkari made a dovish dissent.

We expect the Fed's September announcement about renormalization to follow the path suggested in June. For the first three months (presumably, October – December) the Fed will reduce its balance sheet by $10 billion per month ($6 billion in Treasury securities, $4 billion in mortgage-related securities). Then, every three months, the amount of monthly balance sheet reduction will rise by $10 billion (with the same 60/40 proportion between Treasury securities and mortgage-related securities). That escalation will continue until the Fed is cutting its balance sheet by $50 billion per month (presumably in the last quarter of 2018).

Meanwhile, the Fed softened language surrounding inflation expectations, but made it clear they still anticipate inflation moving towards their 2% inflation target over the medium term. Given the continued improvements in the labor market and consistent – if modest - inflation, we still anticipate the Fed will raise rates once more in 2017. That may change as markets react to the balance sheet normalization process and additional economic data, but, unlike many in the market, we place the odds of a December rate hike at well over 50%.

While others fret about renormalization and rising rates damaging the economy or financial markets, investors should remain bullish. Look for faster economic growth and a continuation of the bull market in equities in the years ahead.


ccp

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Sky high credit card debt
« Reply #1249 on: August 08, 2017, 04:28:00 AM »